Monday, 26 November 2012

THE CAMEROON FOOTBALL/ SOCCER TEAM.


The Cameroon football team or soccer team was founded in 1959 and at that time, it was managed by Denis Lavagne. They practise at the Ahmadou Ahidjo Stadium in Yaoundé. The league at that time was the Confederation of African Football. Cameroon football team is known as the “Indomitable Lions of Cameroon.” It is under the control of the Cameroon Federation Football. This team has qualified six times for the Fifa World Cup more than any African team, the first time being in 1982. Cameroon was the first African team to reach quarter finals of the world cup in 1990. However, they lose to England during the extra time The Cameroon team won the first African Cup in 1984 by beating Nigeria 3-1. This team has won the African Cup of Nations four times.

 The Cameroon Football or soccer team will not be going to the African Cup of Nations in 2013 as they lose to Cape Verde a country that qualified for the tournament for the first time. One of the reasons for this team failure is that it has been poorly managed for the past ten years and the players have not yet received all their due payment for the past matches.

Even though, this is a big disappointment to many Cameroonian who are football fans, they hope one day, the Cameroon football team or soccer team will become one of the strongest teams again in Africa.

Thursday, 22 November 2012

NSO PALACE


The ”Nso Palace” is where His Royal Highness Sehm Mbinglo I resides with his family. The palace is known as a home for all and it is where most events in Kumbo take place. The people of Nso are from the North West Province of Cameroon, about three hours driving from Bamenda Town.At the entrance of the “Nso Palace” is a statue of one of the first royal people of Nso, who was a woman. There, you will find a door to a path that leads to the back of the palace.
Here there is a small court yard where events regarding the Fon (the traditional ruler) and his advisors and a few others are often held. There is also a throne in the middle of the court and other royal art that have some traditional meaning to the Fon and the people of Nso. The Fon sits on a wooden caved chair and a lion skin is placed on the chair, draping to the floor, where he will place his feet. This symbolizes power and authority of the Fon in the Nso land. Advisors to the Fon will sit on one side, everyone else on the other side.

Thursday, 15 November 2012

VOLUNTEERING IN CAMEROON


I met my husband when he was involved with an international organization that sends volunteers overseas to work in developing countries, such as Cameroon. My husband is a Canadian who volunteered to spend 18 months in a rural area in northwest Cameroon, working with the local Council in the area of capacity building. The organization he was with was called VSO (now Cuso International), which works in over 40 countries in Latin America, Africa and Asia. The North American volunteer recruitment office is located in Ottawa. Cuso International focuses on certain key areas of development, including governance, health and education. (http://cusointernational.org/volunteer)

During the period my husband-to-be was in Cameroon, I found myself learning about the volunteer experience, while seeing my husband learn about the local customs, issues and people of his adopted home for 18 months. I had always thought the purpose of volunteering was to provide services to communities that could not afford to pay for themselves. However, what I learned from the many international volunteers that I met was that their intent of being there was not so much to provide a service, as it was to help the local people develop the skills they needed to take care of themselves.  For example, in the education sector, volunteers would spend some time with students, but the majority of their time was used in training teachers and helping improve the way the school system operated. Of course, the purpose of this approach is to help improve the school system to a point where it is no longer dependant on international assistance.




Saturday, 10 November 2012

"CRY DIES"MEMORIALS IN CAMEROON


“Cry Dies” or death memorials celebrated after a year in honour of the love one that passed away. Cameroonians are well known for the way they celebrate their cry dies. This is a memorial festival that is organized and celebrated a year after a person dies. This period is always very emotional as family members and friends turn back to those sweet memories they once shared with this loved one. Weeks and even months before the day of the event, several family meetings are held to raise funds for the occasion and to plan for the day activities. Some families go to an extent of designing and printing invitation cards for the events outlining the activities that will be done the day before the day of the ”cry die” and the day of the “cry die” event. For some families that have other relatives in distant places, travel will be required. Some relations out of Cameroon, travel back home just for the “cry die” because it has a huge meaning in our culture. The man in the picture below has to wear his mother’s dress every year on the day she died to emphasis his love for his late mother who passed away in 2008.


Saturday, 3 November 2012

NATIONAL DAYS IN CAMEROON


 
 Have you ever thought of how holidays( national days) in other countries are celebrated? Some of those days in Cameroon are ”Youth Day”, ”Labour Day”, ”International Women’s Day” and “National Day.”  After having moved to Canada and experienced long weekends, I realized that the traditions around holidays are very different in comparing Canada to Cameroon. A large proportion of the people in Cameroon are Christian, so holidays such as Christmas and Easter are recognized the same way they are in Canada. However, other holidays throughout the year are viewed from a different perspective in Cameroon. I find that in Canada, many of the holidays, such as Labour Day or Victoria Day, have very little in the way of traditional events to acknowledge the reason for the holiday. Also, these days will always be scheduled to take place on a Monday, to allow people the opportunity to enjoy a three day weekend. This is certainly not a bad thing, since it allows people to spend timewith their families or friends.



 

It is a different story in Cameroon. For example, every city and village in the country will celebrate Labour Day by having a parade, in which staff from different companies will march, and they will prepare matching wardrobes to show the unity of the organization. Although it is considered a day off of work, people are still committed to march in the parade to represent their employer. Moreover, Labour Day takes place on May 1st every year, regardless of what day of the week it falls on. It is a day of much socializing, where all the bars and restaurants are open, but the other shops and markets are closed.




Saturday, 27 October 2012

RAINY AND DRY SEASONS IN CAMEROON

Cameroon has two seasons which are the rainy and dry seasons. The rainy season begins in April and ends in November. Most streets, especially in the rural areas, are dirt roads, so they become very muddy during the rainy season, as you can see from the attached photos. Travel is very difficult, to a point where a simple trip can take three times as long, due to the condition of the roads. It is quite common for cars to get stuck on transit to remote villages, and are unable to move for several days. People sometimes have to spend one or two nights by their car on the road. It even happens that access in or out of town can be blocked because a car or large transport vehicle got stuck in the mud in the middle of the road. Depending in what part of Cameroon you are, the rains may come to an end mid October. The rainy season in the northern part of Cameroon has a rainy season that starts in May and ends in September.  Average rainy fall per year is between 1,500mm- 2,000 depending in what part of Cameroon you are. Most areas around the south coast get higher rain fall than areas in the northeast. Kribi, one of the cities around the coast, gets about 2,970 of rain each year.  

Wednesday, 17 October 2012

LIFE AS A KID IN SOME PARTS OF CAMEROON.

Cameroon is one of those places where one may wonder, as kids grow up, what is their lifestyle like?How do they spend their time after school with friends and family. Well, I will tell you a bit about it,based on my experiences as a child there. For a child not big enough to walk, it is very normal for your mother to do all the house work and take you where ever she goes. Most commonly, mothers will carry their child in a ‘sling’, which is really a large piece of cloth that she’ll wrap around her, with the child on her back, tucked away inside. When she starts crimping, she is able to leave you with your elder brother or sister who is about five or six and go to fetch water or buy food from the market. Sometimes, she might ask the neighbour to keep an eye on you when she is gone.

People are not afraid to let their kids explore and go to places without them. When the child starts school, the mother makes sure there is cooked food to take to school and eat during lunch time. The first year, the mother can walk the kid to school but as from the second year, most kids walk to school with other friends from their neighbourhood.

After school, kids spend some time playing with their friends before coming home. It is normal for a five year old, once they get home from school to fetch water or firewood with his elder brother or sister who might be just seven or eight, so that their mother will need that to prepare dinner. Some children have to bathe in a nearby stream after school, as well as wash their school attire and fetch water before going home.

Wednesday, 10 October 2012

FUNERALS IN CAMEROON.

As a kid living in the village, I could count the number of times I heard that someone had passed away and it was always an elderly man or woman. I remember going to a funeral for the first time and seeing the corpse dressed in African wear, lying on a mat on a bamboo bed. The service was for an elderly man who was known as Pa Fondze. I remember stealing my way in because kids were not allowed to see corpse for the reason that they will see dead people at night in their dreams. If a man died in the morning, that person was buried that same day before sun set, and to this day, no burial takes place close to noon. I have never known the reason why, but it is a practice that all tribes in Cameroon follow and respect.

When I was 7 years old, my auntie’s husband, with whom I was living in Bamenda, was transferred to Douala to work as a Police officer. That is where my knowledge of death ceremonies was strongly affected. In Douala funerals are more of a rendez-vous area for meeting friends, drinking, dancing and being introduced to new people. The deceased is kept in the mortuary which is like a deep refrigerator for days depending on how much money the family intends to spend on the burial. In cases where some family members live abroad and have to come home, it can even take up to a month before the service and burial. A day at the mortuary is about $10, but only the rich can afford to keep people for longer than two weeks. In some traditions, when a youth dies when his parents are still alive, the burial is done as soon as possible, because it is considered ill luck to lose a child.

Thursday, 4 October 2012

TRADITIONAL MARRIAGES IN THE NSO LAND

Bui is one of the divisions under the N.W. Province in Cameroon.  It has six sub divisions and its population in 2008 was estimated at 420,000 people, and the capital of Bui Division is called Kumbo. The Nso people are regarded as the grassland people and their traditional language is called Lamnso (Language of Nso). The Fon of Nso is the traditional ruler, both respected by his people and the government. The Fon’s palace is called “Ntoh Nso”, known as the centre for social and cultural festivities. The Nso society is divided in lineage group often referred to as the “Big Compound” and they are ruled by traditional heads known as “Fais” instituted by the Fon of Nso. Like all traditional heads, they do not shake hands with humans as traditional demands.

Traditional marriage rites take place in most Big Compounds and as tradition demands, the groom to be must visit the family of the bride. The parents of the bride have little say about what will be given as a bride’s price. The price for the first girl of a family is paid at the mother’s family Big Compound as tradition requires, and the other girls are paid for at the father’s Big Compound. Tradition of the family compound demands that is what was paid for your mother will be the same that will be paid for you, the bride to be, and it can be in the form of cash or kind, but mostly the groom’s family is provided with a list of things to bring as a bride- price. 

Wednesday, 3 October 2012

POVERTY IN THE VILLAGE

My mother lives in a rural area that has no electricity or running water and is only accessible by “bush taxi” over very rough roads that can become impassable in the rainy season. That is how the poverty level seems like. Some people have gas-fired cook-tops, although many others, including my mother, have to cook their meals over wood burning fires. Almost everyone in the area has dealt with typhoid and malaria at least a few times in their lives.

Believe it or not, Cameroon is not even one of the 50 poorest countries in the world. People are not starving in the region where I come from. In fact, food is abundant in this part of the country, and beggars are more common in downtown Toronto than in Bamenda. Shelter, education and health services are available (with varying levels of quality), and with the exception of remote areas, such as my mother’s village, there is reasonable access to clean water. 

Tuesday, 2 October 2012

POVERTY IN CAMEROON

My home country of Cameroon, like many Sub-Saharan African countries, struggles with high levels of poverty. From an international perspective, the average gross domestic product per capita is estimated at approximately $2,300, compared with $41,100 in Canada. Unemployment in Cameroon is estimated at 30%, and 48% of the population lives below the poverty line.[i]
These statistics suggest that people struggle to survive in Cameroon, but I do not think statistics really tell a story the way it should be told. I would like to tell you a bit about life in the city where I lived before coming to Canada, as well as the village where my mother currently lives. To help with your perspective, try to imagine your own hometown looking like what I’m describing below, keeping in mind that Bamenda is a city of three hundred thousand people.

Monday, 1 October 2012

CAMEROON “MON CAMAIR”

The Republic of Cameroon is a bilingual country (with two official languages - English and French) found in the west- central Africa. Cameroon as it is popularly called, shares borders with six different countries including The Republic of Congo, Gabon, Equatorial Guinea, Nigeria, Chad and Central African Republic. Cameroon is called “Africa in miniature” because of it richness in minerals, cultural diversity and geological coastline that lies in the bight of bonny, the gulf of Guinea Congo and the Atlantic Oceans. 

Saturday, 1 September 2012

ABOUT US

Cameroon is a developing country in West-Central Africa, with a population of about 16 million. The purpose of this blog is to help readers understanding more about this beautiful country. Each posting in this blog covers a different subject related to life in Cameroon, including discussions about the social, economic and political environments. However, most posts focus on the people, their customs and traditions. The author of these blogs is originally from Cameroon, having recently moved to Canada.